I stopped watching pro wrestling around 2001, so my references are going to be extremely dated. But reading the latest mailer from HSBC evoked memories of Kurt Angle turning heel and joining the Invasion.

The HSBC Advance card had, for many months, been my go-to for all things online and dining. With unlimited 10X points on both categories, my only regret was waiting so long to apply for it. 10X was never meant to be a permanent feature, but every time the expiry date came up it got renewed again and again, leading to some hope this would continue indefinitely.

Well, not anymore. HSBC Advance cardholders will be receiving the following in the mail (thanks very much to William for sending in these copies).

I’m going to give you the broad strokes for those of you who can’t read that (you can click on the images to enlarge them)

After 31 May 2017, you will no longer receive the promotional 10X points on dining and online spending.

From 1 June 2017, the card earns the regular rate of 1X on everything, or 0.4 mpd. (EDIT: 1X points is only till 30 June)

In addition to this, you will also earn cashback at the following rates-

For those of you with a HSBC Advance banking relationship (and I’m guessing you all do, since you need it to get a HSBC Advance card), you’ll earn 3.5% cashback if you spend more than S$2,000 a month, otherwise you’ll earn 2.5%

3.5% cashback on anything isn’t, in and of itself, a bad thing. The best rate for a “general spending” cashback card (that is, a cashback card that offers a flat rate on all spending) is now 1.5%, offered by the SCB Unlimited Cashback and the AMEX True Cashback cards.

Of course, these have no caps, and the HSBC Advance cashback is capped at S$125 per month. A cap of S$125 a month implies that the cashback is maxed out with a monthly spend of S$3,571.

Fortunately, there continues to be no annual fee payable for the HSBC Advance. Because, like I’ve said many times, it makes completely no sense paying an annual fee for a cashback card.

(2) You need to cash out your available HSBC rewards points by 31 Aug 2017 unless you have another HSBC card that also earns rewards points

If you do not have another HSBC credit card that earns rewards points (eg the HSBC Revolution), you will need to convert your HSBC rewards points to miles by 31 Aug 2017.

There is some time lag involved in the crediting of the 9X bonus points, but whatever hangovers from your May spending will have posted by 1 Aug 2017.

Remember that the conversion rate from points to miles is 5 points= 2 miles, and HSBC points can transfer either to Krisflyer or Asiamiles at the same rate.

(3) If you don’t cash out your rewards points by 31 Aug 2017, they will be converted to cashback at a rate of 100 points= S$0.25

Again, this assumes you don’t have another HSBC credit card that earns rewards points.

For us consumers, the generally accepted rate for buying miles through annual fees is no more than 2 cents per mile (although there are several credit cards that will let you buy closer to the 1.6-1.7 cpm mark)

But when banks buy miles in bulk from the airlines, they presumably get some sort of discount. How much that discount is, we don’t know, but HSBC’s valuation is perhaps is one of the most explicit statements of how banks value miles.

HSBC will convert your accumulated rewards points at a rate of 100 points= S$0.25. 100 points is 40 miles. This means HSBC is willing to pay you 0.625 cents per mile, and this forms the floor price for what they buy miles at.

Now, here are some questions you might be asking-

Couldn’t they just have imposed a cap on 10X?

I’ve said from the start that awarding 4 mpd without limit is simply unsustainable from a financial point of view. A long time ago I had a sit down with someone in the cards team at a major local bank, and he showed me the math illustrating how they were bleeding money every time they had a 10X type promotion.

10X type promotions cannot exist in a vacuum- they need to drive some other sort of behavior, be it spending on a certain category (dining, shopping online), in a certain way (Paywave) or opening a certain account (Advance).

My guess is that HSBC’s goal with the 10X Advance promotion was to drive enrolments in their Advance program, which is something like entry-level preferred banking. They probably intended to do cross selling of other financial products and build up their customer base. All those funds parked in low interest earning accounts couldn’t have hurt either.

But now that objective has been met (or simply failed to be met for so long that they’ve given up), there’s really no reason to continue 10X-ing, even with a cap. Why leave more money on the table than you have to?

So it would have been nice to see HSBC start to sunset this promotion by imposing a cap, but really the business case didn’t work out for them.

Should I close my HSBC Advance account?

This seems a bit of a no-brainer to me. If HSBC stops the 10X promotion, I’m not going to have my funds sitting around in a virtually zero interest earning account (I mean, who would do that right). I will be transferring my funds out and closing my account once I get back to Singapore.

What card do I now use for online shopping?

Fortunately, there are other cards that can step in to fill the online shopping void. Any of the following should work

As with all expenditure, there will be a deluge of “will spending at XXX get 10X?” questions. Please refer to this spreadsheet which has put together a lot of the information you need.

P.S- I know there are some who will advocate using the Singpost Platinum Visa card that earns 7% cashback on online spending, capped at S$720 per year. You need to spend S$600 a month to earn the 7% rate. You already know my feelings on cashback cards, but if you think this works for you then by all means. He said, passive aggressively.

What card do I now use for dining?

If you’re got a UOB Preferred Platinum AMEX, carry on. If not, there has been a recently verified report of someone successfully applying for the card via the SMS method, so that seems to be your best option. On the other hand, a lot of other people who tried that have already been rejected so I wouldn’t go in expecting to be approved. The Schrodinger’s cat nature of the UOB PP Amex continues to fascinate me, I’ve really got to write something about that soon…

Otherwise, the HSBC Revolution gives 2 mpd for dining, online and entertainment spend, so it’s a plausible choice if you don’t have an alternative dining card and want to continue accumulating points with HSBC. Be sure to open your card before 31 Aug 2017 though, or you could see all your hard earned points get converted to cash…

Alternatively, the Maybank Horizon Visa Signature card will get you 3.2 mpd on dining both locally and overseas, as well as petrol and taxi fares.

Edit: Oh yes, the OCBC Voyage card offers 2.3 mpd on dining as well.

Conclusion

It’s sad to see the HSBC Advance 10X go away, but opportunities come and go all the time. Let’s be thankful for all the miles we earned while it lasted, and look forward to the next big thing.

The Maybank Horizon card seems more restrictive on dinning than the Revolution card. Maybank’s website states that the 3.2mpd is on ‘Restaurant Dinning’ . The Revolution card gives 2mpd on ‘restaurants, cafes, fast food outlets’.

It may not be entirely accurate to say that deposits into the Advance account earn virtually zero interest. HSBC has been having step up promos for quite a while and I have been getting quite good interest rates. Currently, we can get 1.45% interest plus another 0.75% by spending $500 on anything using your debit card.

The 1x Rewards points for the HSBC Advance card is for June 2017 only. After that, the card only gives rebates which is why any balance of Rewards points will be transferred to another HSBC card or refunded in cash.

To me, the extra 1% to remain an Advance customer is not worth it if you have got to the stage where you have $30k cash just sitting with HSBC, especially since I have been enquiring about promotional term deposit rates for the past 6mths and it’s pretty unattractive what they are offering (this step up interest is just to get you to put even more money with them – no thanks). With a balance of $30k, assuming earning no interest (because 30c interest per month is pretty forgettable), if that was put into a UOB One account @ 1.5%… Read more »

I don’t understand why many debate the 0.5% differences in fixed deposits between banks, when there are plenty of other investment avenues.
If you can hold for 3-5 years, unit trusts are a great way to save and earn 8-10% per annum and they can be done through any bank.

Please tell me which unit trust earns 10 pc pa. I have a useless unit trust with a useless bank that shall remain unnamed (the same one that recently launched a useless miles debit card). I bought it 17 years ago and it is actually worth less now than what I paid. Should have stuffed the cash under the mattress instead.

Ask your bank for full list of funds and scroll down the equities section.
The sales guys tend to dump high commission funds on us if we are not asking questions.
Plenty of US, India and China funds are up 10-20% this year, thanks to Trump and other factors. Of course that won’t continue, but Long term returns can easily be higher than 5%.

That’s exactly my point. Unless you have commitments within a year or two, you are leaving a lot of money on the table by focusing on deposits.
A well diversified equities fund over 5 years has very less risk as it usually covers one full business cycle.

hahaha you wish. your other option is to open another hsbc card that earns points, like the hsbc revolution. if you do, your hsbc advance points will be transferred over into that balance and you dont have to cash out straight away

Revolution still a decent card. Has the same T&Cs as the old Advance, except half the points (5x). So it has one of the most inclusive definitions of online spend in the market.
DBS WWMC is 10x but they have cut a fair bit of the fun out of that card in the past few months.

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